Postcards from the edge (of reality)

You may have heard through the grapevine that I recently went on a week’s vacation — holiday, to you fancy folk in some countries. It was great: learning about another culture, eating freshly-caught (and freshly-clubbed) fish, relaxing on the beach, and spending the declining US dollar in a way that was more wallet-friendly than staying at home. And it occurred to me (with a little prodding from someone…) that place is important. In the context of anime, a place can be as compelling a character as any human, Abh, or magical ferret, but rarely gets the same attention. What is Love Hina without the Hinata Inn, and where else but planet Gunsmoke does Vash the Stampede make even a drop of sense? Here are some my favorite anime places.

Neo-Venezia

Cropped. Click for full size on pixiv.

Cropped. Click for full size on pixiv.

It probably won’t surprise any Aria viewer that this one would go at the top of the list. Yes, there are cute gondoliers and suteki~ oneesamas like Alicia, but the lead character of Aria is not the titular cat, but Aqua — and its fake Italian city. Built by human hands, and mostly as a tourist destination, but not to be a gaudy Vegas/Cancun/Dubai statement of “look what we can do” or a faux-experience Disneyland. Instead, Neo-Venezia is an authentic locale born from the dedication of a few intrepid souls to recreating a simpler time and place. It’s the best kind of future, really: Technology ensures that all of the wonderful baked goods and none of the diseases of the past live on in a pleasant and welcoming place that neither gets you too dirty nor reeks of touristy “plastic”-ness.

Glie

Glie: Image copyright ABe

If any anime gives off a similar vibe to Aria, it’s Haibane Renmei. I don’t mean in the sense of stories, characters, or even mood (Haibane actually has a story, which doesn’t make it superior to Aria necessarily, but different for sure). It’s that indescribable something special that makes you feel like you’re the only person who’s ever watched this, regardless of how many other people you know who find it wonderful. And like Aqua, Glie is a place that affects the story as strongly as any of its residents. Unlike Aqua, it has a complex set of rules and physics that separate it from the rest of the universe — at least, people assume that, but seeing as how they can’t freaking leave, it’s hard to prove anything about the outside world. Glie provides a wonderful mirror to the characters’ minds. Rakka loves it at first, but mistrusts its intentions more and more as she comes to empathize with Reki, who finds the town to be a comfortable cage from which she can’t escape.

Mayan

Leave it to Kawamori to name his island ode to vanishing culture and environment so plainly after a nearly-decimated American culture. Obvious message is obvious. Mayan serves two main purposes: it inspires a desire in Shin, Roy, and the viewer to protect it (wait… geographical moe?), and it provides a unique perspective on the story of the final world war on Earth. So it’s not the most well-developed location, but it does what it does well. In Macross Zero’s pre-SDF timeline, the world has yet to unite behind the giant ship to fight the Zentraedi, and is instead fighting itself. Honestly, it’s probably a more compelling story, and that’s largely because it’s told from the perspective of the Mayan Islanders — the collateral damage who can understand neither the motivations nor the sophisticated weapons of the mainlanders. The low-tech, spiritual world that they inhabit lends a mysterious new meaning to the Protoculture for fans of Macross, and their mythology does more to explain exactly what the Protoculture is (and means) than Exedol’s visit to the edge of the universe in Macross 7.

There are more, many more…

Even a completely real place (like Tokyo) can be an effective focus of a story, especially if, like other fictional characters, it’s put in a unique situation or circumstance (a massive earthquake). The question of place is often what elevates an otherwise ho-hum anime beyond average, whether it’s a school life or post-apocalypse setting. So what are your favorite anime places? Is there anywhere that’s crucial to a plot, fascinating to think about, or just well-drawn enough that it catches your brain as much as the characters and story? I, for one, would like to watch it, so I can take another vacation without having to get the days off work.

Fuck these (14) Comments.

  1. digitalboy says:

    there was a blogger who was really great for the ever-so-short time he existed who made a great case for how the director of Shigurui and Texhnolyze really turned the environments themselves into characters, especially in Texhnolyze. This is incredibly important to me in writing as well. I had a movie I wrote but never got to make before moving, wherein my own house was the true main character of the movie, and a point was to be made of showing the rooms from all angles.

    • otou-san says:

      cool, I haven’t actually seen much of Shigurui, but Texhnolyze I can agree with. Interestingly, there is a Haibane connection there, too, since ABe was a designer on that show.

  2. Neo Venezia hands down. We went on honeymoon there and it was suteki~ as you said.

    In science fiction/fantasy, the Mars of Kim Stanley Robinson’s Mars trilogy, Frank Herbert’s Dune, Isaac Asimov’s Foundation, and Tolkien’s Middle-Earth stand out as settings-as-narrative-subjtects.

    In manga I can think of Mamoru Nagano’s Five Star Stories. You should check out animekritik’s work on it. It tast gud.

    • otou-san says:

      Agreed on the sci-fi stuff, Middle-Earth is probably about as far as one can go with this concept. I don’t know too many other authors who wrote bibles for their worlds.

  3. nekosasu says:

    100% agreed with Neo-Venezia (I almost ended up typing neko-venezia…)

    In fact, that fictional place had such a huge impact on me that it completely motivated me to visit the real one. It was not so the same utopia (especially concerning the sweaty, male Undi- gondolieri who looked like prisoners), but it was still pleasant. Perhaps too pleasant… In February, a dramatic reality check soon kicked in, and I realized I could not prevail in that foreign land, unlike Akari. Well, utopias are still, sadly, only fictional.

    • otou-san says:

      Sounds (and looks) amazing. I hope to get there sometime. I have friends who, while they’ve never seen Aria, go every couple years because they love Venice that much. Not to mention, it won’t be around forever seeing as how it’s sinking. The lack of female gondoliers is not surprising, given that they’ve only recently had one (who I think is still in the testing/vetting process) after something like a thousand years. Part of the great thing about a trip is coming home, though…

  4. Owen S says:

    Hoo boy. I just remembered how reading Hardboiled Wonderland and the End of the World gives an entirely new meaning to Haibane Renmei. Pick it up sometime.

  5. animekritik says:

    It’s funny, I hate Glie, maybe it’s some sort of claustrophobia or maybe it’s that i read murakami’s book owen s. mentioned.

    Anime/manga places I love:

    1) the shopping district in Marmalade Boy – nondescript carefree goodness.

    2) Several worlds visited in Galaxy Express 999, e.g. Nuruva.

    3)Any locale illustrated by doujin artist OKAMA – lush!

    4)FSS – AS per ghostlightning’s statement. Though so far I’m far more infatuated with the characters than with the scenery.

    • otou-san says:

      Glie is claustrophobic, although I think it’s possible that it’s meant to be a mirror and a model of any world executed in small scale for the ease of ABe telling his story.

      I am woefully ignorant of any of the locales you mention, but Express is on my list. If I can ever finish Harlock, I’ll be on to that. Between you and ghostlightning, FSS is really starting to look like something I won’t want to avoid too much longer either.

  6. animekritik says:

    @otou-san

    That’s right, otou. Come into the world of FSS, once you’re in you’ll never be able to leave. Bwahaaahaaahaaah!!

    oops, did I comment that out loud! Ugh!

  7. kadian1364 says:

    Shit, now I’m desperately searching for (and failing to find) this one blog post I read where the author lists 3 anime worlds he would like to live in. I even remember which ones they were: Planetes, Someday’s Dreamers, and the aforementioned Aria. There was a mention of Dennou Coil too. Some pretty amazing places there.

    To note some other yet unmentioned locales, Kamichu’s pastoral seaside town filled with laid-back shinto gods of every shap and size seems both fantastic and relaxing at the same time. Outlaw Star did a great job of fleshing out its universe of space frontierism and galaxy exploring with bits of narrator preludes throughout episodes. And finally, I’d be pretty set if I could find a bar as classy as Eden Hall.

    • otou-san says:

      I’m sadly ignorant of all these, although Dennou Coil and Planetes have been on my list for a minute. Will try to check some of these out, let me know if you find the post.

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